The Pictorial Edition of the Works of Shakspere, 2. kötet;7. kötet |
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1 - 3 találat összesen 73 találatból.
196. oldal
Come , we are fellows , and friends : Thy country's strength and weakness , -thine he was ever too hard for him ; I have heard him own ways : say so himself . Whether to knock against the gates of Rome , 1 Serv .
Come , we are fellows , and friends : Thy country's strength and weakness , -thine he was ever too hard for him ; I have heard him own ways : say so himself . Whether to knock against the gates of Rome , 1 Serv .
273. oldal
9 ) of the enemies , he then spake these words : -Desiring too much to live , I have lived to see one of my best friends taken , for my sake , before my face . After that he got into a tent where nobody was , and took Pindarus with him ...
9 ) of the enemies , he then spake these words : -Desiring too much to live , I have lived to see one of my best friends taken , for my sake , before my face . After that he got into a tent where nobody was , and took Pindarus with him ...
95. oldal
In the 138th , fiction , -received as a workof fiction , -handed about printed in 1599 , be describes himself as “ past the amongst private friends " without the slightest best " '- ' -as “ old . " He was then thirty - five .
In the 138th , fiction , -received as a workof fiction , -handed about printed in 1599 , be describes himself as “ past the amongst private friends " without the slightest best " '- ' -as “ old . " He was then thirty - five .
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Tartalomjegyzék
JULIUS CAESAR 215 | 238 |
ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA | 277 |
SUPPLEMENTARY NOTICE TO THE THREE ROMAN PLAYS | 339 |
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Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
Achilles Ajax answer Antony appear arms bear beauty better blood bring Brutus Cæsar called Cassius character Cleo Cleopatra comes Coriolanus Cres dead death desire doth edition Enter Exeunt eyes face fair fall false fear fight follow fortune friends give gods hand hast hath head hear heart heaven Hector hold honour Italy keep king Lady leave live look lord Macb Macbeth Mark matter means meet mind nature never night noble once original passage peace play poem poet poor praise pray present reading reason Roman Rome SCENE senators Serv Shakspere Sonnets speak spirit stand strong sweet sword tell thee thine things thou thou art thought tongue Troilus true truth unto wife worthy